| Literature DB >> 28491401 |
Jack-Yves Deschamps1, Emmanuel Topie1, Françoise Roux1.
Abstract
CASE SERIESEntities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 28491401 PMCID: PMC5362001 DOI: 10.1177/2055116915621581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JFMS Open Rep ISSN: 2055-1169
Summary of 14 cats involved in feline calicivirus-associated virulent systemic disease in Nantes, France
| Reference | Presenting complaint | Clinical signs | Vaccination status | RT-PCR | Origin of the infection | Incubation time | Outcome | Duration (days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cat 0 | Anorexia | Fever (hyperthermia, weakness, anorexia), lingual ulcers | − | Unavailable | Unknown | Unknown | Recovered | 20 |
| Cat 1 | Fracture of the radius-ulna | Fever, lingual ulcers, significant erythema at the surgical site | Unknown | Unavailable | Cat 1 | 6 days | Died | 13 |
| Cat 2 | 10 cm inguinal wound | Fever, lingual ulcers, diarrhoea, pleural effusion | + | Unavailable | Cat 2 | 5 days | Died | 12 |
| Cat 3 | Fracture of the tibia | Fever, lingual ulcers, facial oedema, significant erythema at the surgical site | + | + | Cat 3 | 5 days | Recovered | 40 |
| Cat 4 | Anorexia secondary to dental disease | Fever, lingual ulcers, perineal ulcerations | − | + | Cat 3 | 4 days | Recovered | 12 |
| Cat 5 | Forelimb paralysis | Fever, lingual ulcers, chin ulcers | − | + | Cat 3 | 3 days | Euthanased | 13 |
| Cat 6 | Rupture of the bladder | Fever, lingual ulcers, subcutaneous oedema, significant erythema at surgical site and around catheters | Unknown | Invalid (but necrospy confirmed) | Cat 6 or cat 5 | 3 days | Euthanased | 8 |
| Cat 7 | Fall from the fourth floor | Fever, lingual ulcers, footpad ulcers, oedema of all four limbs | Unknown | + | Cat 6 | 7 days | Euthanased | 8 |
| Cat 8 | Urolithiasis | Fever, lingual ulcers | − | + | Cat 4 | 3 days | Euthanased | 7 |
| Cat 9 | Ataxia | Fever, lingual ulcers, sneezing, nasal discharge, oedema of the face and limbs | − | + | Cat 5 | 9 days | Euthanased | 20 |
| Cat 10 | Dysorexia and exhaustion | Fever, lingual ulcers, icterus | − | + | Cat 5 | 9 days | Euthanased | 22 |
| Cat 11 | Chronic renal failure | Fever, lingual ulcers, icterus | − | + | Cat 5 | 1 day | Euthanased | 5 |
| Cat 12 | Fall of several stories | Fever, lingual ulcers, facial ulcers, limb ulcers, oedema of the face and limbs, sneezing, nasal discharge, epistaxis, vomiting | Unknown | + | Cat 5 | 8 days | Euthanased | 14 |
| Cat 13 | Bacterial cystitis | Fever, lingual ulcers, haematuria, vomiting | + | + | Cat 5 | 2 days | Died | 10 |
| Cat 14 | Anorexia | Fever, lingual ulcers, facial ulcers, limb ulcers | + | Unavailable | Cat 5 or cat 8 | 4 days | Recovered | 10 |
RCT-PCR = reverse transcriptase-PCR
Figure 1Ulcers on the face of cat 12
Figure 2Origin of the infections . Dashed lines indicate where two sources of contamination are possible. ER = emergency room; ICU = intensive care unit
Outbreaks of feline calicivirus-associated virulent systemic disease reported in the world
| Year of outbreak | Year of publication | First author | Location | Place | Cases (n) | Mortality (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | 2000 | Pedersen | Sacramento/UC Davis, CA, USA | A private small animal hospital/an experimental animal facility | 7/4 | 43/50 |
| 2001 | 2003 | Schorr-Evans | Bellingham, MA, USA | A private small animal hospital | 24 | 38 |
| 2002 | 2004 | Hurley | Los Angeles, CA, USA | Three veterinary practices and a rescue organisation | 54 | 65 |
| 2003 | 2006 | Coyne | Staffordshire, England | Two neighbouring private households | 5 | 60 |
| 2005 | 2009 | Reynolds | Toulouse, France | A veterinary teaching hospital | 8 | 63 |
| 2005 | 2011 | Schulz | State of Hessen/State Bavaria, Germany | An animal shelter/a veterinary teaching hospital | 55/4 | 22/75 |
| 2011 | 2015 | Deschamps | Nantes, France | A veterinary teaching hospital | 14 | 79 |